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Dec 31, 2013
12/13
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johnson was key in that. her alabama roots where her mother was from and she spent time there with her cousins as a child and she -- on spending time in the south and -- but she also, home to texas, they did have this one awful incident where they were attacked and she was very rudely dangerously treated of there were a lot political analysts think that threw texas to them because to see are so shocked lady, and particularly a lady like mrs. johnson, treated in the a fashion but look, main thing is that texas did go it not,ticket and had kennedy would not have been elected president and whenever we're talking about the pick for president and all that, the only time we can ever actually a vice vice presidential pick made a difference is the pick.n >> and she held those teas all onoss texas and insisted shaking hands with all of the showed up women that go forer texas did kennedy in 1960, didn't kennedy said mrs. johnson won texas for us. when approached about the issue, how did she reply? not sure she ever rep
johnson was key in that. her alabama roots where her mother was from and she spent time there with her cousins as a child and she -- on spending time in the south and -- but she also, home to texas, they did have this one awful incident where they were attacked and she was very rudely dangerously treated of there were a lot political analysts think that threw texas to them because to see are so shocked lady, and particularly a lady like mrs. johnson, treated in the a fashion but look, main...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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johnson was the senate democratic leader. kennedy was the more junior senator so he was sending johnson a lot of letters asking for different committee assignments. johnson seem to put them away, and ted sorenson had a wonderful know. kennedy appointed john to do some third or fourth tier dredging commission or something. sorts and send them and said we are making great progress. senator johnson is named you the chairman of the boston harbor dredging commission. it was a competitive relationship, but in the end i think johnson came to respect kennedy as a tough, former politician. didn't think he was a real heavy hitter on policy but he thought he was a really compelling political figure. >> did president kennedy's saturday career benefit him as president? >> i think it did but i think he understood the issues, the foreign policy issue very well. he had a good schooling in that. i think he developed an appreciation for how congress works. he spent 14 years in congress, but he was very clear that he wanted to move on to the pr
johnson was the senate democratic leader. kennedy was the more junior senator so he was sending johnson a lot of letters asking for different committee assignments. johnson seem to put them away, and ted sorenson had a wonderful know. kennedy appointed john to do some third or fourth tier dredging commission or something. sorts and send them and said we are making great progress. senator johnson is named you the chairman of the boston harbor dredging commission. it was a competitive...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the furtive journalist. she had an eight millimeter .amera to capture home movies we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the she love to sit here at this desk to keep up with her correspondence and her activities as first lady. closet with her clothing withe the boots and hats, a lot of her colorful outfits, her shoes. .ne of my favorites and she was known as a special lady. lady bird johnson would often be a tour guide. she was very impressed that she wanted to see how the truman stories would be interpreted. >> we are at the private office at the lbj library. a typical day would begin with her coming in around 9:00. she would be carrying a bag in each hand filled with some things she had taken home for signing or speechwriting, whatever she was working on. handad a satchel in each like saddlebags. her desk was always very orderly. she kept file
lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the furtive journalist. she had an eight millimeter .amera to capture home movies we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the she love to sit here at this desk to keep up with her correspondence and her activities as first lady. closet with her clothing withe the boots and hats, a lot of her...
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Jan 5, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson at the camera for her wedding gift, and she became a photojournalist. capture home to movies. hours and hours of her home movies. as well as the recorder here where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. and this became the basis of the "ook, "a white house diary, which is a chronicling of the tumultuous years of the 1960's. mrs. johnson wrote for 34 years 34 years after the president's death. she loved to sit at this desk and keep up with her correspondence. also in this space, we have mrs. johnson's closet, with all of the clothing. her formal wear, the ranch clothing with the boots and the hats. a lot of her colorful outfits, and her shoes. one and then all of the photographs and those who mattered so much to her. to her grandchildren and great- grandchildren, she was known as mimi, a special person in their lives. lady bird johnson had a great sense of history. and during her years in washington, she would often be a tour guide for
lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson at the camera for her wedding gift, and she became a photojournalist. capture home to movies. hours and hours of her home movies. as well as the recorder here where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. and this became the basis of the "ook, "a white house diary, which is a chronicling of the tumultuous years of the 1960's. mrs. johnson wrote for 34 years 34 years after the president's death. she loved to sit...
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Jan 5, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson would have supported that. in some ways, programs of the reagan administration, a sense of self responsibility, and lyndon johnson would have support that. he was not for giving away money without any kind of responsibility being exerted by those who received it. i think that is an important ask but i want to bring about. host: this is from one of my viewers, -- one of our viewers, wow, 25% in poverty when johnson took office and that was rogue poverty. -- that was real poverty. no safety net. programscial security were very modest, nose for retired persons who had paid into social security, but for example, medicare was part of the war on poverty, and medicaid, if you were an older person and you had medical problems, there was really no safety net for you at that time. that is why medicare came into effect. there really was very little social safety net in the 1960's until the war on poverty program started being passed. host: when they ring the bell on wall street and make record highs, from whom are they ma
lyndon johnson would have supported that. in some ways, programs of the reagan administration, a sense of self responsibility, and lyndon johnson would have support that. he was not for giving away money without any kind of responsibility being exerted by those who received it. i think that is an important ask but i want to bring about. host: this is from one of my viewers, -- one of our viewers, wow, 25% in poverty when johnson took office and that was rogue poverty. -- that was real poverty....
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Jan 3, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the photo journalist. she had an eight millimeter camera to capture home movies. we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the book "the white house diary" a very insightful chronicling of those tumultuous years of the 1960's. in her later years, she kept up with her correspondence here at this desk. we also have mrs. johnson's closet with all of her lothing. her formal wear a. with the the ranch clothing, boots, hats, her colorful outfits. one of my favorites, her straw hat with the bluebonnets ainted on top. and then her private bathroom which is very reflective of family with all a of the photographs of those who mattered so much to her. and to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren she was known as mimi, a very, very special person in their lives. lady bird johnson had a great sense of history. and during her years in washington, she would oft
lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the photo journalist. she had an eight millimeter camera to capture home movies. we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the book "the white house diary" a very insightful chronicling of those tumultuous years of the 1960's. in her later years, she kept up with her correspondence here...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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he said johnson's war on poverty speech was one of his best and the timing was perfect. >> johnson realized he was not going to be a loved president. therefore, it's much easy to continue the line of a president that was more than admired. he was loved and whatever. and take his agenda and make it yours. all the time, making sure that you give enough credit to the person. >> let us carry forward the plans and programs of john fitz jarrod kennedy. not -- phil torres jerald cepped. not because of our sorrow or our sympathy but because they are right. >> to help convince congress to help invest on the war on poverty, johnson took his plan to the people. known as poverty tours, johnson went to see the poorest of the poor in places like the mountains of virginia. >> it helped with the legislation and every time you played these little theatrics, you are going to have success. >> five years after the law passed, poverty dropped from around 20% to around 11%. today it's back around 15%. that's more than 46 million americans according to the census bureau. >> the richest nation on earth can afford
he said johnson's war on poverty speech was one of his best and the timing was perfect. >> johnson realized he was not going to be a loved president. therefore, it's much easy to continue the line of a president that was more than admired. he was loved and whatever. and take his agenda and make it yours. all the time, making sure that you give enough credit to the person. >> let us carry forward the plans and programs of john fitz jarrod kennedy. not -- phil torres jerald cepped....
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Jan 5, 2014
01/14
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and the former congressman and johnson aide, a member of the johnson foundation, will be joining us from austin, texas. and part of our american cities we will, -- tours, feature the history and literary life of bellingham, washington. we will present all of the history offerings, including a look at the maritime history of the city and its importance during world war two. more recently during the world -- the vietnam war. the importance of bellingham 's maritime history goes back to the 1850's and onward. people never came here by any other way than boat. aerefore, it has always been old building seaport community. it is on the coast. boatbuilding and the waterfront has always been a really important part of our culture. it is the reason that a lot of people like coming here. we are speaking from the maritime museum. it is located down near the waterfront. what is important for people to see when they come in is that we try to corner off the county and the sound history. we extend our from there. ofhave a good representation companies like the shipyards. they were hugely important to th
and the former congressman and johnson aide, a member of the johnson foundation, will be joining us from austin, texas. and part of our american cities we will, -- tours, feature the history and literary life of bellingham, washington. we will present all of the history offerings, including a look at the maritime history of the city and its importance during world war two. more recently during the world -- the vietnam war. the importance of bellingham 's maritime history goes back to the 1850's...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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did we get close to johnson's vision? or did it put a tax burden for the next 50 years. >> our task is to help replace their despair with opportunity. >> january 8, 1964, president lyndon johnson's state of the union address. >> this administration today here and now declares u unconditional war on poverty in america. i urge in congress and all americans who join with me in that effort. [applause] it will not be a short or easy struggle. no single weapon or strategy will suffice. but we shall not rest until that war is won. the richest nation on earth can afford to win it. we cannot afford to lose it. >> just weeks after jfk's murder the new president found he was leading a nation with millions trapped in desperation and hardship. and set out on a course to bring americans out of poverty. >> for the war against poverty will not be won here in washington. it must be won in the field. in every private home. in every public office. from the courthouse to the white house. >> it required an unprecedented push to improve and cr
did we get close to johnson's vision? or did it put a tax burden for the next 50 years. >> our task is to help replace their despair with opportunity. >> january 8, 1964, president lyndon johnson's state of the union address. >> this administration today here and now declares u unconditional war on poverty in america. i urge in congress and all americans who join with me in that effort. [applause] it will not be a short or easy struggle. no single weapon or strategy will...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the photojournalist. she had an eight millimeter camera to capture home movies. we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the book "a white house diary" a very insightful commentary of the tumultuous years of the 1960s. also in the space we have all of the former -- formalwear, a lot of colorful outfits, shoes. favorites, the straw hat with the bluebonnets. and then the importance of family. those matters so much to her. to her children and grandchildren, she was known as mimi. lady bird johnson had a great sense of history. i had the fortune to meet lady bird johnson while working at the harry s truman historical site. see how the truman story was being interpreted, knowing one day her story would be told at the ranch. >> we are at the lbj library. i was her social secretary from 1976 until 1990. a typical day would the her coming at about 9:00. she
lyndon johnson gave mrs. johnson a camera for her wedding gift. she became quite the photojournalist. she had an eight millimeter camera to capture home movies. we have hours and hours, as well as the recorder where mrs. johnson every night at the white house would record her daily observations. this became the basis for the book "a white house diary" a very insightful commentary of the tumultuous years of the 1960s. also in the space we have all of the former -- formalwear, a lot of...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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. >> madam chair johnson? >> here. >> commissioner mondahah is absent and all other commissioner are present. two announcements, a, please be advised a member of the public has up to three minutes to make personal public commentses on each agenda item unless the commission adopts a shorter period on any item. it is strongly recommended that members of the public who wish to address the commission fill out a speaker card submitted to the commission secretary [speaker not understood]. the next order of business is item 3, report on actions taken at previous closed session meeting, if any. there are no reportable actions. the next matter of business is item 4, matters of unfinished business. we have no item. the next order of business is item 5, matters of new business, first can consent jed item 5a, approval of minutes, regular meeting of november 5th, 2013. madam chair? >> thank you very much. is there any public comment on the minutes? >> i have no speaker cards, madam chair. >> okay, thank you very much. i be
. >> madam chair johnson? >> here. >> commissioner mondahah is absent and all other commissioner are present. two announcements, a, please be advised a member of the public has up to three minutes to make personal public commentses on each agenda item unless the commission adopts a shorter period on any item. it is strongly recommended that members of the public who wish to address the commission fill out a speaker card submitted to the commission secretary [speaker not...
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Jan 2, 2014
01/14
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one of those women was a liza bunton johnson. this was lyndon johnson's grandmother. i didn't know about her, although she was in the books, but i have not dwelt on a part of the tarot books about lyndon johnson. but lucy johnson was giving me my children a 200 of the johnson ranch which is a national park and a preservation area. she was giving us a tour of the house that they had grown up in and were part of that range. she talked about her great-grandmother, who had been out there in johnson county in johnson city in that area. and how she had survived an indian raid in their home by hiding under the house and putting a rug over the trapdoor that she had gone under and putting a diaper in her baby's mouth so that the baby wouldn't cry, and she heard the indians, in. she stayed down there, and she took the horses outside and then she heard footsteps back in and her husband was crying or it just out loud, thinking that she had been taken or killed. so she opened the trap door and came out. this is what was passed down. and i said, oh, my gosh, she should be in the bo
one of those women was a liza bunton johnson. this was lyndon johnson's grandmother. i didn't know about her, although she was in the books, but i have not dwelt on a part of the tarot books about lyndon johnson. but lucy johnson was giving me my children a 200 of the johnson ranch which is a national park and a preservation area. she was giving us a tour of the house that they had grown up in and were part of that range. she talked about her great-grandmother, who had been out there in johnson...
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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wednesday is the 50th anniversary of a landmark speech by lyndon baines johnson. ,lbj. we look at the speech and it'sing. >> this administration today here and now declares unconditional war on poverty in america. >> reporter: the speech came less than two months after the assassination of president kennedy. >> our aim is not only to relief the symptom of poverty, but to cure it, and above all to prevent it. >> reporter: poverty had been a major concern of president kennedy and with the country still grieving and one in five americans living in poverty johnson declared war on poverty. university of texas dallas professor wrote a book about how poverty undermined the united states. he said that johnson's war on poverty was one of his best. >> he knew he was not going to be a loved president. therefore it's much easier to continue the line of a presidency that was more than admired. he was loved and whatever, and take his agenda and make it yours. all the time making sure you give enough credit to the person. >> let us carry forward the plans and programs of john fitzgera
wednesday is the 50th anniversary of a landmark speech by lyndon baines johnson. ,lbj. we look at the speech and it'sing. >> this administration today here and now declares unconditional war on poverty in america. >> reporter: the speech came less than two months after the assassination of president kennedy. >> our aim is not only to relief the symptom of poverty, but to cure it, and above all to prevent it. >> reporter: poverty had been a major concern of president...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Jan 6, 2014
01/14
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as you will hear from our partner david johnson and his firm. it has our leadership goal to high quality enterprises in san francisco and nurtures a business environment that supports strong economic growth as you will hear from mayor lee. it also established new benchmark for what is possible today for commercial development and you will happy hear from our company leader. john kilroy. i think you will understand that we are a huge believer of san francisco. we have demonstrated that faith in local management, resources and development. it has taken a big teamworking together very closely to bring us to today's ground breaking. that is a lot of people and we are glad to see to many people with us today. it's my pleasure to introduce one of the city's biggest visionaries and supporters. the mayor learned from the very beginning what a very exciting opportunity this has been and he's supported us every way through this development. i know my daughter will understand 1 day how special it is to have him here. please welcome honorable mayor lee. >>
as you will hear from our partner david johnson and his firm. it has our leadership goal to high quality enterprises in san francisco and nurtures a business environment that supports strong economic growth as you will hear from mayor lee. it also established new benchmark for what is possible today for commercial development and you will happy hear from our company leader. john kilroy. i think you will understand that we are a huge believer of san francisco. we have demonstrated that faith in...
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Jan 1, 2014
01/14
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he worked humphrey and lyndon johnson in 1960. i mean, he was not a natural politician, but when he decided to run a race, he was a fiercely competitive, very tough, from the -- formidable back. >> a question. you mentioned a critique of defense policy in vietnam and the algerian and poland. and obviously what he had said about vietnam in algeria, how was that received in the u.s.? positioning himself for a presidential run? just curious as to how -- >> it was considered very controversial because the cold war was still in its intense phase and there was a sense that kennedy had sort of transcended what was appropriate. that there was -- there were several people is a committee should not come on the floor of the united states senate and criticize an ally. he actually gave his first speech -- i forget the exact date, but he ended up giving a very lengthy 11 week later saying, have gotten a lot of responses last week, and i feel like and the jury spine, first of all, why give that speech and also to respond to a little bit of the b
he worked humphrey and lyndon johnson in 1960. i mean, he was not a natural politician, but when he decided to run a race, he was a fiercely competitive, very tough, from the -- formidable back. >> a question. you mentioned a critique of defense policy in vietnam and the algerian and poland. and obviously what he had said about vietnam in algeria, how was that received in the u.s.? positioning himself for a presidential run? just curious as to how -- >> it was considered very...
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it's 50 years since president lyndon johnson called for a war on poverty. we look at the successes and failures of that fight. >> in iraq the government in anbar says it has retaken the city of ramadi, a day after it was seized by militants linked to al qaeda. they remain on the edges of ramadi and fallujah, as local tribal leaders consider their next move. both cities are key regional centres and witnessed fighting. we have more from al jazeera's imran khan. >> after a standoff lasting days the iraqi army is ready to go to the city of fallujah, and fight the al qaeda-linked group i.s.i.l. the agreement to do so was heartfought. sunni tribes insisted they be part of the situation. others disagreed saying i.s.i.l. fighters were protecting fallujah. the standoff is an indication of the sunni tribe and shia-led government disagreements. nouri al-maliki now has an agreement to act. >> translation: there's increased coordination between the army and tribesman. the army provides the tribes with weapons and everything they need in the battle against the terrorists
it's 50 years since president lyndon johnson called for a war on poverty. we look at the successes and failures of that fight. >> in iraq the government in anbar says it has retaken the city of ramadi, a day after it was seized by militants linked to al qaeda. they remain on the edges of ramadi and fallujah, as local tribal leaders consider their next move. both cities are key regional centres and witnessed fighting. we have more from al jazeera's imran khan. >> after a standoff...
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Jan 5, 2014
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-- andrew johnson from tennessee, who is put on lincoln's ticket in 1864 election. i don't think anyone would have thought or maybe they did -- lincoln was always thinking morbid thoughts understandably, but andrew johnson would be president. there was a great deal of talk he was drunk at the inauguration. so there was a transition, which was right after -- days after, it's hard to imagine days after the war. there were some people in the south and west who were fighting. they didn't want to stop fighting. andrew johnson is the new president. .. >> reemerge in a new way and washington was an incredible leader because he had the unusual ability to realize i have to change course here. i think lincoln could work with that and had a pragmatic sense that this is the right thing. but to achieve it we will have to make it work. and that is so unusual. that you combine a real ideal t idealistic vision and how we use that to make a higher good happen. and those kinds of leaders are so rare. and i think one of the amazing things about american history is they seem to appear
-- andrew johnson from tennessee, who is put on lincoln's ticket in 1864 election. i don't think anyone would have thought or maybe they did -- lincoln was always thinking morbid thoughts understandably, but andrew johnson would be president. there was a great deal of talk he was drunk at the inauguration. so there was a transition, which was right after -- days after, it's hard to imagine days after the war. there were some people in the south and west who were fighting. they didn't want to...
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Jan 7, 2014
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actually, you know, johnson came from private business. and he was shocked when he got to the senate to find out that senators who have a budget for their office and have to consider the salaries of their workers don't actually pay the benefits for the workers because if you're in private business as he was, you'd think of materials and your labor costs and -- including the salaries and the benefits and everything. and then if you're a senator, you pay someone's salary, then someone else pays the health care benefits. and he was always amazed by this. can you believe that they really do that? i think that what he's doing is -- is emblematic of a larger republican frustration with president obama's unilateral changes in obamacare like the -- the delaying of the employer mandate. so many of these things, they've really frustrated republicans, they had said you have to go through congress to do this. and of course by the way, we'll block anything you try to do. republicans feel that -- the president does not have the authority to do this kind
actually, you know, johnson came from private business. and he was shocked when he got to the senate to find out that senators who have a budget for their office and have to consider the salaries of their workers don't actually pay the benefits for the workers because if you're in private business as he was, you'd think of materials and your labor costs and -- including the salaries and the benefits and everything. and then if you're a senator, you pay someone's salary, then someone else pays...
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now folks, folks, johnson, jr. peter went on to explain the scam. >> let's go through the 12th big scams of christmas. number one, boggus charities. number two, mallwear e holiday card. number 8 santa's slay scam, the home alone scam. >> sure. >> sending an e-mail or call, i'm stranded, please, i need, send me money. don't be wiring money. reindeer rippoff, very perform. be careful about buying chia pets on-line, the pooch might have flees. finally, the penultimate mistle toe madness be don't fall in love with somebody on-line. they're trying to bilk you. >> stephen: now that's a lot of warnings, so let's review. your stranded loved ones are all liars [bleep] them. if you buy a dog on-line, it will have flee, which are incurable so you have to put it down in front of the kids, merry christmas. and finally, finally, the penultimate, don't fall in love with somebody on-line. it appears to have happened to peter johnson, jr.. you know how it is, you chat with the ukrainian woman on-line, buy her an airline ticket to v
now folks, folks, johnson, jr. peter went on to explain the scam. >> let's go through the 12th big scams of christmas. number one, boggus charities. number two, mallwear e holiday card. number 8 santa's slay scam, the home alone scam. >> sure. >> sending an e-mail or call, i'm stranded, please, i need, send me money. don't be wiring money. reindeer rippoff, very perform. be careful about buying chia pets on-line, the pooch might have flees. finally, the penultimate mistle toe...
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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>> everett, serving ten years for home invasion robbery and his cell mate joseph johnson, serving ten years for aggravated all the and armed robbery, will be held in their cells. everett says it's of no concern. >> i ain't going to take it serious cause i know that they putting up an act. try to act tough, pull us both out. whatever they find, they find. >> though everett's possible gang affiliation prompted the shakedown, johnson's possessions will be searched, as well. >> is there a particular reason we being targeted? >> targeted? i just reached in and picked your number out. that's it. that's it. you like that answer? >> sounds like a lie to me. >> okay. i wouldn't them bobos. concerned with bobos or sneakers when they come out, helps them get around. they want to fight. it's a whole lot easier for traction. sometimes it's an indication in the day room you'll see several come out in bobos that something's going to happen. >> you was high to me. if i want to fight, i could come out in these. i don't need a particular type of shoes to fight. >> okay. >> i want to fight. taking my sh
>> everett, serving ten years for home invasion robbery and his cell mate joseph johnson, serving ten years for aggravated all the and armed robbery, will be held in their cells. everett says it's of no concern. >> i ain't going to take it serious cause i know that they putting up an act. try to act tough, pull us both out. whatever they find, they find. >> though everett's possible gang affiliation prompted the shakedown, johnson's possessions will be searched, as well....
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Jan 7, 2014
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BLOOMBERG
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when i say in conversation, i do not mean emily chang and cory johnson. i mean the board of directors. they have been actively considering him as a potential successor. it is a really important piece of information. he is walking away from this. or was told he is out of the running. it suggests a lot about the future of microsoft or suggest something about how they will compensate this person. it is worth noting that alan stocky has over 900,000 on invest in a microsoft. he would leave over 900,000 shares of ford on the table. a company like microsoft would the to pay him for that to tune of $15 million just to walk in the door. >> right. like microsoft has been having a lot of difficulty getting anyone to accept this job. maybe the problems there are just too difficult. >> taking the job, running microsoft will be incredibly difficult. it will be a tough job for really tough person. are hundreds, if not thousands of people who want to take on that task. what this really shows is that the microsoft board has started to figure out what they want is the kin
when i say in conversation, i do not mean emily chang and cory johnson. i mean the board of directors. they have been actively considering him as a potential successor. it is a really important piece of information. he is walking away from this. or was told he is out of the running. it suggests a lot about the future of microsoft or suggest something about how they will compensate this person. it is worth noting that alan stocky has over 900,000 on invest in a microsoft. he would leave over...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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egregious he most example perhaps but it is one that senator johnson is able to about.ething from our perspective this case is not about whether or not congress and their staff should be able to receive contributions ee to their health insurance. it is about the rule of law and of law should le be followed and we are confident that if we are able to make our united states district court for the eastern district of wisconsin that osition will be upheld w. that i will turn it over to mr. clement. >> thank you. i wanted to pick up where rick off. as he indicated, when the affordable care act was passed congress that f the president signed and it included a number of very deadlines, very specific formulas. hat has happened as the implementation deadlines have come to the fore is that the multiple tion on occasions has relaxed the deadlines, changed the rules, this part of the law, that part of the law won't go into ffect on the date congress specified. a lot of people, in looking at branch actions say it is contrary to the law doubt but they would somebody would have standing to bring a c
egregious he most example perhaps but it is one that senator johnson is able to about.ething from our perspective this case is not about whether or not congress and their staff should be able to receive contributions ee to their health insurance. it is about the rule of law and of law should le be followed and we are confident that if we are able to make our united states district court for the eastern district of wisconsin that osition will be upheld w. that i will turn it over to mr. clement....
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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for magic johnson to mike tyson, we could throw the university out of this. look at magic johnson's career and mike tyson's career. post career what can you do with your life? everybody here would never thought mike tyson once he got through boxing would still be relevant to the degree that he is still relevant. he found a way to turn his life into something to do with his postboxing career. >> no, but he has resources around him to reinvent himself. >> he did that as an athlete. magic johnson went to michigan state, i'm not sure that michigan state laid the groundwork, but i'm using these two as books ends as beyond what the university does, athletes in all genres, in all of the sports, you have two individuals and a lot in between. we could go to bill bradley, allen page, michael jordan, we can go down the line of what athletes have done but use that as resource. there are other athletes who have done things in a wide variety of field that they can use how they want to move forward post playing the game. >> we have 20 seconds. >> i would just like to say on
for magic johnson to mike tyson, we could throw the university out of this. look at magic johnson's career and mike tyson's career. post career what can you do with your life? everybody here would never thought mike tyson once he got through boxing would still be relevant to the degree that he is still relevant. he found a way to turn his life into something to do with his postboxing career. >> no, but he has resources around him to reinvent himself. >> he did that as an athlete....
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and equality johnson passed that right but kennedy started it all and so that ticked off the south so who killed him down with the n. and he also after the bay of pigs said he was going to break the cia into a thousand pieces and he fired their top three guys allen dulles so the cia was pissed at him kennedy had more enemies within his administration that he had in the rest of the world or that his soviets he was actually do you know he was back channel communicating with nikita khrushchev and they were going to end the cold war by sixty five i never heard of that all read my book i'm going to read it after the fact though anything can come up with a conspiracy like obama's hated today against more death right where secret service guy told me they get more death threats for all bomb of than all presidents combined they deal with it every day so if he's killed you're going to have a conspiracy of who i really are i mean well it's so easy to come up with this yes yeah but it's but but when you come up with a patsy like oz wald larry he couldn't make the shots impossible i show in the bo
and equality johnson passed that right but kennedy started it all and so that ticked off the south so who killed him down with the n. and he also after the bay of pigs said he was going to break the cia into a thousand pieces and he fired their top three guys allen dulles so the cia was pissed at him kennedy had more enemies within his administration that he had in the rest of the world or that his soviets he was actually do you know he was back channel communicating with nikita khrushchev and...
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Dec 30, 2013
12/13
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. >> she agreed to go texas because the factions of lyndon johnson and the liberal senator were at each other's throats and jack kennedy needed texas again. so they went to texas. they went to houston, they went -- ended up in fort worth, the night before on the 21st of november. and on the 22nd of november, as they were talking in the bedroom, he said something that i found eerie. >> yes. well, the night before they arrived in fort forth, they had come from houston. now they are in the hotel room in the morning. and the president looks at a newspaper. the dallas paper. he's reading it before he flies there. there's a full-page ad welcoming him to texas. they thought they're welcoming me. they were having a good trip so far. the 21st went great. then he read the ad. and it was a 12-list of being a communist, socialist, causing death of american soldiers in vietnam. and he said, will you look at this? we're flying to nut country today. then he said, you know, last night when we got here, would been a hell of a night to assassinate the president. it was dark, the crowds were pressing in.
. >> she agreed to go texas because the factions of lyndon johnson and the liberal senator were at each other's throats and jack kennedy needed texas again. so they went to texas. they went to houston, they went -- ended up in fort worth, the night before on the 21st of november. and on the 22nd of november, as they were talking in the bedroom, he said something that i found eerie. >> yes. well, the night before they arrived in fort forth, they had come from houston. now they are in...
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Jan 4, 2014
01/14
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lyndon johnson and d.c. crime commission observed in 1965 the and the rest for public drunkenness totaled three times the number per-capita than any significant size city. this rigorous arrest policy enforced agents for some reasons not least because the u.s. court of appeals ruling in 1966 which held that a person could not be arrested for public drunkenness if he was an alcoholic since inebriation was the result of a disease and not a voluntary act of a person in possession of his faculties. combined with the controversy over vagrancy and disorder a rests the mtv within the span of five years went from an enforcement agency that made thousands upon thousands of arrests for drunken this to one that made hardly any at all. in the same time, arrests for possession of narcotics surged. before 1960, the department of corrections sentenced an average of 50 apps attic to jail 3-year. this number grew at a gradual pace that 1966 the figure was roughly 150 annually. drug war historian clarence loser in points out t
lyndon johnson and d.c. crime commission observed in 1965 the and the rest for public drunkenness totaled three times the number per-capita than any significant size city. this rigorous arrest policy enforced agents for some reasons not least because the u.s. court of appeals ruling in 1966 which held that a person could not be arrested for public drunkenness if he was an alcoholic since inebriation was the result of a disease and not a voluntary act of a person in possession of his faculties....
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Jan 7, 2014
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the war on poverty, it dropped by 43%, a faster rate than before johnson did that. the 26 to 16% number, others say it was 19 to 15% today. it seems to show this helped a lot of people. >> i can't comment on the numbers that melissa pulled out. they sound encouraging the government statistics show more are in poverty today than before. the poverty rate was coming down. then in the mid '60s, it stopped coming down. the improvement stop exactly at the time the government, the federal government and washington got massively involved which suggests that maybe we should learn a lesson from bill clinton, and the successful welfare reform. the program was kicked back to the states and we got better all. >> as dan is saying you could argue that the economy would have improved a lot of poor americans. if it's that four percentage point drop, the number used when talking about the war on poverty, that that is virtually decades. >> the official poverty rates don't take into account poverty achievements put in place. the enactment of nutrition assistance. spreading that - it se
the war on poverty, it dropped by 43%, a faster rate than before johnson did that. the 26 to 16% number, others say it was 19 to 15% today. it seems to show this helped a lot of people. >> i can't comment on the numbers that melissa pulled out. they sound encouraging the government statistics show more are in poverty today than before. the poverty rate was coming down. then in the mid '60s, it stopped coming down. the improvement stop exactly at the time the government, the federal...
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edgar hoover his his lifetime mistress nat'l and browning stated she was there when johnson came out he grabbed her hand and said after tomorrow those kennedy boys will never bother me again which all of us but i never heard that he does that but no one to mention no. no warren commission didn't want anybody that told a different story come down to the final of thing on this book or i will cool conspired to kill him well that's the difficult question in fifty years let's just put it this way jack kennedy made a lot of enemies he made enemies of the military industrial complex because he would not invade cuba which they wanted to do and he was going to pull us out of vietnam so that's two wars that kennedy was going to head off that we were going to be part of that ticked them off he was going to take away the oil depletion allowance which is where all these oil guys make their real money not having to pay taxes because kennedy couldn't figure out how a guy like h.l. hunt could make thirty million a year and not pay any taxes is so he was going to do it so that got the oil people angr
edgar hoover his his lifetime mistress nat'l and browning stated she was there when johnson came out he grabbed her hand and said after tomorrow those kennedy boys will never bother me again which all of us but i never heard that he does that but no one to mention no. no warren commission didn't want anybody that told a different story come down to the final of thing on this book or i will cool conspired to kill him well that's the difficult question in fifty years let's just put it this way...
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Dec 31, 2013
12/13
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fair enough. >> hugh johnson, chairman of hugh johnson advisers. >>> and coming up on nightly business report. you heard of smart cars, now automakers are teaming up to give car makers a brain boost, next. >>> ford motor says 2013 has been a great year, so much so the automaker says it is on track to top toyota for the fourth straight year for the title of best selling brand in north america. the final numbers won't be released until friday, but ford says sales rose 15% through november, with the most significant gains coming through the u.s. dominated coastal market, the best sales in six years. >>> and cars are about to get a lot smarter, apple and google moving quickly to get their technology into the cars of the future. josh lipton tells us how your driving experience could soon be changing. >> next week, at the electronics show, google and audi are expected to make a big announcement, the two are expected to make information systems based on google's android software, the point they say is to give drivers access to music, navigation and services available on google smartphons.s >>
fair enough. >> hugh johnson, chairman of hugh johnson advisers. >>> and coming up on nightly business report. you heard of smart cars, now automakers are teaming up to give car makers a brain boost, next. >>> ford motor says 2013 has been a great year, so much so the automaker says it is on track to top toyota for the fourth straight year for the title of best selling brand in north america. the final numbers won't be released until friday, but ford says sales rose 15%...
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Dec 31, 2013
12/13
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professor johnson, two of the big overseas stories had tremendous repercussions here at home. one of nsa spying on foreign leaders and heavy surveillance operations going on in foreign countries. and also the step back at the last minute from going ahead with some sort of strike in syria to move against the stock piles of chemical weapons held by bashar al-assad. what do you make of those, and how did americans looking at that was there a certain weariness with the rest of the world that made americans want to pull back? >> it's completely two different situations. edward snowden, the significant of him was to those active american citizen who is were already fearing the encroachment of the state. this has been going on since the passage of the patriot act and there was another group of people who said this has been going on for years. edward snowden just put a white middle class face on it. it's going going on for years. it brought up the debate of what our government is doing and do we trust the transparency promoted by the obama administration. but syria is different. using
professor johnson, two of the big overseas stories had tremendous repercussions here at home. one of nsa spying on foreign leaders and heavy surveillance operations going on in foreign countries. and also the step back at the last minute from going ahead with some sort of strike in syria to move against the stock piles of chemical weapons held by bashar al-assad. what do you make of those, and how did americans looking at that was there a certain weariness with the rest of the world that made...
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Jan 7, 2014
01/14
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republican senator ron johnson of wisconsin joins me next. why he is suing the obama administration over what he calls special treatment for members of congress and their staff. first, a look ahead in today's politics planner. you're watching "the dailyiondown" only on msnbc. vice president biden going to albany in this weather, air force 2 must know how to land well. and ah, so you can see like right here i can just... you know, check my policy here, add a car, ah speak to customer service, check on a claim...you know, all with the ah, tap of my geico app. oh, that's so cool. well, i would disagree with you but, ah, that would make me a liar. no dude, you're on the jumbotron! whoa. ah...yeah, pretty much walked into that one. geico anywhere anytime. just a tap away on the geico app. at a company that's bringing media and technology together. next is every second of nbcuniversal's coverage 0f the 2014 olympic winter games. it's connecting over one million low-income americans to broadband internet at home. it's a place named one america's mos
republican senator ron johnson of wisconsin joins me next. why he is suing the obama administration over what he calls special treatment for members of congress and their staff. first, a look ahead in today's politics planner. you're watching "the dailyiondown" only on msnbc. vice president biden going to albany in this weather, air force 2 must know how to land well. and ah, so you can see like right here i can just... you know, check my policy here, add a car, ah speak to customer...